The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 14, 1956, Page 12, Image 12

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    12-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Thiirs., June 14, '50
Johnson Says
Foreign Aid
Hike
Unlikely
By i. W. DAVIS
' WASHINGTON It-Sen. Lyndon
. Johnson D-Tex said the Admin-,3
- lstration has a job cut out lor s, m
convincing the Senate K ihouM
. vote more foreign aid money than
the House did.
' Johnson, the Senate majority jit
.'The Administration is going to
nave to make a case which it
hasn't done yet
- "If it makes a case, fortifies
(he testimony its officials gave the
House, the Senate will do what is
best for the country."
President Eisenhower asked $4.-
. 900.000,000. The House ut its !
auinonzanon diu 10 j.w,imi,uw
despite pleas from Eisenhower,
Secretary of State Dulles and other ,
officials. v j
Eisenhower, from Walter Reed ;
. Hospital, passed along another !
plea to senators Tuesday to raise !
the amount the House consiaereo
. enough. Senate leaden wha at
tended a Whit House conference
yesterday said the Administration
would settle for K.400,000.000, or
too million mora than the House
figure. r -'
Sen. George (D-Ga), chairman
of the Senate . Foreiga Relations
Committee, undertook leadership
of a mova to restore S00 million
of the cut, and this seemed to be
the highest possible restoration the
Administration could nope for.
-Then Republican senators Case
(NJ). AIM (Coto). Bender (Ohio),
Duff (Pa), Bush (Conn), Flanders
(Vt). Ives (NY), Kuchel (Calif),
Payne (Maine) and Purtell (Conn)
joined today in a statement
backing mora foreign aid funds
than the House approved. They
aid: . " .
"However heavy the expense
may seem, it la nonetheless in
finitely cheaper than the cost of
waging war. , . -
- f'A cut in mutual security funds
does not mean that the money will
be saved.
. -NATO (The North Atlantic
' Treaty Organization i is still our
first line of defense against an
onslaught across Europe. We will
have to spend several times the
amount just to keep up the same
level of defense. And clearly-we
, dare not let down our defenesi at
this, new and critical stage in
world affairs." ''S"v.;--.rr
.vThe Senate Foreign Relations
Committee held Its first closed
door session on the aid bill Wed
nesday. ;. r-'-y ', -
It voted for a change la the
language that Hob is used in
promising future foreign aid as
long as the Communist threat con
tinues. .. . . i,. -j
The House said the UJ. policy
Would be to provide this aid in
rich . amounts "as the United
States ia able to provide." The
Senate committee voted to make
f read ia stftv amwrata as the
Luted States "deems It advisable
H provide."
State Bpard
Forms'Plan to
weed
T Oregon is going to have a try at
ragweed control, if a decision
reached by the governor's commit
tee en natural resources, meeting
in Salem Tuesday is adopted by
the Legislature.
- Frank McKennon, state agricul
tural department, recommended a
compulsory ragweed control pro
gram for , Western Oregon. The
area suggested for control would
extend as far south as the southern
boundary of Josephine County. Ac
' carding to McKennon, a recent sur
vey snowed that the infestation in
Western Oregon was spotted and
probably could be controlled or
eventually eradicated at fairly low
cost. Infestation in some other
parts of the state is more serious,
he said.
" The committee, upon motion of
James F. Short, state agricultural
department director, adopted reg
Weed control as a project and auth-
' erfated state game commission dir
ector, P. W. Schneider to appoint a
committee to draft appropriate leg
islation for consideration at the
157 Legislature.
Both Harold ' Ericsson, state
health officer, and Short, referred
to ragweed as "vicious" and said
it was primarily a health problem
rather than an agricultural one.
Dr. Ericsson added that regweed
apparently had caused a lot of hay
fever and asthama in Oregon.
Judge Drops
Indictments of
BillyDaniels
NEW YORK - Two assault
indictments against night club star
Silly Daniels were dismissed Tues
day by general session Judge Ja
cob Gould Schurman.
rThe 40-year-old singer had been
accusea m oeing invoivea in an
early morning fracas in a Harlem
bar on Jan. 31 in which James R.
Jackson, a boxing trainer, was
hot and injured. '
The dismissals clear Daniels of
aU charges.
. Dankls, out on &500 bail since
E leading innocent to the cnarges,
i currently filling an engagement
In England.' : - ' .
E:!pjl!dfcdCto
l:cfrG!dan::h!
tesao, a doetora antiseptic,
promptly relieves itehin gv stops
eraicbincaBdaesMlps keel and
jr-t aroi rasftBjy
IsmIVImji n eneef ' jwaaaw
n sw"; in - ey-:isiwr.ii4M zoom.- m sr vtiw yw w . '-rr.
' I!,"'" ' Jffy 'fS"
I jTjTL " Aj$STl Jil'V' " ii inn mi iiiiiu.. '""J"" iT3tivF
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